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A resolution recognizing the 50th anniversary of the Centennial Art Center.
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WHEREAS, Spring 2022 marks the 50th anniversary of the historic Centennial Art Center located on 25th Avenue North; and
WHEREAS, the Centennial Art Center (CAC) was established in the summer of 1972 and has been recognized as one of Nashville's leading community art education institutions; and
WHEREAS, the building was originally constructed in 1932 and served as Nashville's premier swimming facility; and
WHEREAS, the complex was a "Whites-only" pool and boathouse and was abruptly shut down in 1961 in response to an effort to integrate the pool led by two African American students, Kwame Lillard and Matthew Walker, Jr.; and
WHEREAS, the city went on to close all Nashville public pools, blaming the sweeping closures on budgetary concerns. When Nashville and Davidson County consolidated into a Metropolitan Government in 1963, many neighborhood pools eventually reopened, but the CAC building sat vacant for nearly ten years - to some, a daily reminder of the city's racial divide; and
WHEREAS, on April 23, 1972, the CAC became the first Metro Nashville owned structure that was rehabilitated for adaptive reuse reopening as an art gallery and visual arts teaching facility; and
WHEREAS, the former deep end of the swimming pool was preserved as a sunken lawn in the rear portion of the building's courtyard where events are now regularly hosted; and
WHEREAS, the CAC art gallery showcases the art of local and regional professional and emerging artists and is open to the public free of charge; and
WHEREAS, the CAC building is also home to art studios and hosts 23 weekly pottery and painting classes; and
WHEREAS, over the years the CAC has become the hub of Metro Parks' Visual Arts Program; and
WHEREAS, this year, Metro Parks will shed light on the little-known history of the building's origins and use the 50th anniversary as a time of both reflection and celebration; and
WHEREA...
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